MPdb: Melghat Plant Data Bank
MC038 : Trichosanthes cucumerina L. |
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| Melghat's Flora's Serial No. : | - |
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| Plant Location in Melghat : | Chaurakund | |||||||||||||
| Plant Category : | Climbers | |||||||||||||
| Plant's Current Status : | - | |||||||||||||
| Plant Family : | Cucurbitaceae | |||||||||||||
| Plant Common Name : | Snake Gourd • Hindi: Chachinda, Chichonda • Kannada: adla balli, adla kaayi, bettada padavala • Malayalam: padavalanga, kaippam-patolam • Marathi: jangli padavala • Sanskrit: Amritaphala, bijagarbha • Tamil: pudalankaai, alakaipputal • Telugu: potlakaaya, adavi potla | |||||||||||||
| Synonym : | - |
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| Description : | Large Climber. Leaves 5-7 lobed. Flowers white. Berries ovoid, scarlet to orange. Snake Gourd is a tropical or subtropical vine, raised for its strikingly long fruit, used as a vegetable and for medicine. The narrow, soft-skinned fruit can reach 150 cm long. Its soft, bland, somewhat mucilaginous flesh is similar to that of the luffa and the calabash. Leaf blade kidney-shaped or broadly ovate, 7-10 × 8-11 cm, membranous, deeply 5-7-lobed, lobes triangular or rhombic. The white flower is beautiful and lacy, and open at night. It is most popular in the cuisine of South Asia and Southeast Asia. The shoots, tendrils, and leaves are also eaten as greens. It is a popular vegetable in South India. | |||||||||||||
| Curated Medicinal Use / Activity : | According to Ayurveda, the plant pacifies vitiated pitta, constipation, skin diseases, burning sensation, diabetes, anorexia, flatulence, constipation, worm infestation, fever and general weakness. | |||||||||||||
| Plant's Phytochemicals : | delphinidin chloride epicatechin gallate epicatechin Kaempferol epigallocatechin |
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| Reference : | ~ Londhe AN, Watve AV and Ansari MY; "Additions to the flora of Melghat Tiger Reserve"; J. Econ. Taxon. Bot. (2002); 26(2): 385-395 PMID : ~ Nduche, M.U. and Okwulehie, I.C.; "ETHNOMEDICINAL SURVEY OF PLANTS USED IN TREATING SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES IN ABIA STATE, NIGERIA"; Review of Plant Studies (2014); 1(2): 1-9 PMID : |
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